Many Polaris 2-stroke motors have an oil injection system that varies the amount of oil required. If a user is eliminating this system, or has a unit without oil injection, the standard ratio is 50:1.
They didn’t pretend anything, but they did disguise them as showers. They could gas 300 people an hour 24 hours a day.
Split injection techniques are used in capillary gas chromatography. Capillary columns are easily overloaded, so smaller amounts have to be injected. Because of the split a smaller amount of analyte will enter the column
The idea is to divide the number of miles by the number of gallons. That gives you a certain number of "miles per gallons".
The purpose of a gas meter is to monitor how much gas a particular house is using. Customers are then billed according to how much gas they have used from the meter.
That depends what you want to measure about the gas: its volume, mass, transparency, temperature, etc. The really isn't such a thing as a "unit of measurement of gas", there are units of measurement for mass, volume, temperature, etc., all of which can be attributes of a specific gas.
50/1
Yes 32-1 ratio
50:1 2.56oz to one gal
40:1
for high performance use 30 to 1 for normal use it would be 50 to 1
50:1
Inside gas tank
Remove the hose from petcock check if fuel is flowing from it ok. If its not you have to clean out the tank. If its in the hose just replace the hose.
gas oil ratio for 1994 ktm 50 junior
For a 1997 Polaris Scrambler 400 4x4, the recommended gas-to-oil mix ratio is typically 40:1. This means you should mix 3.2 ounces of 2-stroke oil per gallon of gasoline. Always use high-quality 2-stroke oil and ensure thorough mixing to keep the engine running smoothly.
The proper ratio, for the 1994 model 112 hp Johnson, would be 50:1. This is roughly measured at one pint of 2 cycle oil, to six gallons of fuel.
the ratio is 999 degress nort